Sandy Bridge is Intel’s 2011 performance mainstream architecture refresh. It won’t take the place of the 6-core Gulftown based Core i7 processors at the top of the charts, but it’ll occupy the competitive space below it. The value segments won’t see Sandy Bridge until 2012.

The first CPUs will ship very early in 2011 for both desktops and notebooks. The architecture discussion we have here today applies to both. The CPUs won’t be called Sandy Bridge but instead will be called Intel’s 2nd generation Core i3/i5/i7 microrpocessors. The naming system will follow this format we outlined in our earlier look at Sandy Bridge:

Sandy Bridge Desktop CPU Comparison

Base Frequency

L3 Cache

Cores/Threads

Max Single Core Turbo

Intel HD Graphics Frequency/Max Turbo

Unlocked

TDP

Intel Core i7 2600K

3.4GHz

8MB

4 / 8

3.8GHz

850 / 1350MHz

Y

95W

Intel Core i7 2600

3.4GHz

8MB

4 / 8

3.8GHz

850 / 1350MHz

N

95W

Intel Core i5 2500K

3.3GHz

6MB

4 / 4

3.7GHz

850 / 1100MHz

Y

95W

Intel Core i5 2500

3.3GHz

6MB

4 / 4

3.7GHz

850 / 1100MHz

N

95W

Intel Core i5 2400

3.1GHz

6MB

4 / 4

3.4GHz

850 / 1100MHz

N

95W

Intel Core i3 2120

3.3GHz

3MB

2 / 4

N/A

850 / 1100MHz

N

65W

Intel Core i3 2100

3.1GHz

3MB

2 / 4

N/A

850 / 1100MHz

N

65W

The CPUs will require a new socket (LGA-1155) and all new motherboards based on Intel’s forthcoming 6-series chipsets.

The new socket

New low-profile 45W Sandy Bridge heatsink (left)

The chipset brings 6Gbps SATA support (2 ports) but no native USB 3, motherboard manufacturers will still have to use an off-chip controller to get USB 3 support. Intel will also enable 5GT/s PCIe 2.0 slots with its 6-series chipsets.